All posts in Courts

Judge R. Posner Writing Entertains Again

I’ve always been a fan of Justice Robert Jackson’s writing.  Judge Posner, of the Seventh Circuit, reminds me of such entertaining writing.  I hope he accepts the next invitation to join the supreme bench.

In response to debtor’s argument that 707(a)’s grounds for dismissal are exclusive, Judge Posner rebuts by saying:

The fact that the three grounds in §707(a) are introduced by “including” tugs against the argument that they are exclusive, or that they exhaust the statute.   If you tell your maid to iron your clothes, including your Bond Street tuxedo and its cummerbund, there is no implication that she is not to iron your other clothes.

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Video Overview of New Forms

The Bankruptcy Court for the Central District of California has prepared a video overview of the new forms that are effective December 1, 2015 and it is available on our court’s website under the News and Announcements section.

Thank you,

CANB HELP DESK
U.S. Bankruptcy Court, NDC
Information Technology Division

Eligibility of Trusts to File Bankruptcy

Judge Tighe did a great analysis on eligibility of trusts to file bankruptcy.  Her tentative is below In re: The Shahla Dowlati 2005 Living Trust. 

UST moves to dismiss this chapter 11 case because the Shahla Doowlati 2005 Living Trust (the “Trust“) was created for estate planning purposes, and thus is ineligible to be a debtor. Section 109(a) establishes that “only a person that resides or has a domicile, a place of business, or property in the United States, or a municipality, may be a debtor under this title.” Section 101(41) defines “person” to include any “individual, partnership, and corporation.” It does not include governmental units or trusts. See 11 U.S.C. § 101(41).

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RDM’s Roundup

Starting December 1, we all have to use the new national forms. Although you can hypothetically e-file a case using the old forms and get a case number (and automatic stay…) you will immediately be hit with a case deficiency notice requiring the uploading of the correct/missing forms within seventy-two hours or the case will be dismissed.

The general vibe I get is that attorneys are not that worried about the new forms as the BK software “we” (all!?) use will just spit them out organized correctly, after “we” have input the info the way we always have. Read more…

CM/ECF Signatures

I have been questioned about an /s/ signature we uploaded recently.  It made me pull out the Court Manual and remind myself of the actual requirements for using an /s/ signature.  After 8-9 readings of the same few lines, I think I’ve got it down.

  1. If the signature is of the actual registered user, i.e., the attorney, i.e., me, the hard copy still must be signed and the original signature maintained for five years after the closing of the case.  The /s/ signature may be uploaded by itself.
  2. If the signature is of the debtor, the hard copy must be signed and an ecf Declaration must be signed by the debtor and the registered user.  The /s/ signature can be uploaded with the ecf Declaration.  The original signature must retained for 5 years.
  3. If the signature is someone other than the debtor, but is a client of the registered user, follow number 2 above.  Remember, if you represent a corp, the owner is not the client.  If you represent a bank, the person signing the pleading is not the client.
  4. If the signature is not the debtor and not your client, you cannot use the /s/ signature.  You must upload the actual signature, which they love to call the holographic signature.  Another example of this would be a person in your firm who is not the registered user.  You must upload the holographic signature except when it is a signature of the proof of service.  See next number.
  5. If the signature is an employee of the firm or the registered user, you can upload the /s/ signature on the proof of service – only.

2015 REVISED Official Bankruptcy Forms Effective AND MANDATORY December 1, 2015

ATTENTION ECF USERS:

As previously announced, most Official Bankruptcy Forms are scheduled to be replaced with substantially revised, reformatted and renumbered versions. The new forms become effective and mandatory on December 1, 2015.

The Court has posted a web page, www.cacb.uscourts.gov/form-changes-2015, to provide the following information about the new Official Forms:

– Video overview of the new official forms titled, 2015 Revised National Bankruptcy Forms: An Overview Of Changes Effective 12/1/2015;
– Bankruptcy Forms Numbering Conversion Chart;
– Redline revisions to Court Manual Section 2 concerning new case commencement filing requirements;
– Updated Petition Packages;
– Instructions for Bankruptcy Forms for Individuals, and Non-Individuals;
– Link to the U.S. Courts website for access to additional information about the new forms, including Committee Notes

The Court will offer the same video overview mentioned above on November 24, 2015, at the Los Angeles Division. Representatives from the Clerk’s Office will be present to answer any questions you may have.  If you plan to attend, RSVP to ECF_Support@cacb.uscourts.gov with the number of attendees in your party. You will receive a confirmation email with the time and room number where the overview will take place.

ECF Help Desk
ECF_Support@cacb.uscourts.gov

On Blaming the Paralegal for the Calendar Mistake – Tentative from Judge Barash

I always cringe when I hear an attorney apologize for being late or filing something late and using the excuse of “it was miscalendared.”  I cringe because it has happened to me a time or two but you hear it so often that you think judges are going to stop accepting the excuse at all.  Judge Martin Barash in Woodland Hills posted a nice tentative on the issue:

Calendaring mistakes happen.  However, the Court notes its general view that calendaring mistakes are not, per se, excusable neglect.  The Court finds particularly unpersuasive the sort of explanation provided here: that someone else (in this case a paralegal) miscalendared a status conference.  Attorneys may look to others to assist with calendaring matters, but they do so at their own peril.  Ultimately, it is the attorney – the individual who is licensed to practice law – who bears the responsibility for keeping track of the deadlines set by the Court and by applicable law.  Fortunately, in this instance, the consequences were not more serious, and the Court will excuse counsel’s failure to appear.  However, the Court’s decision to do so should not be viewed as precedent of any kind, and any future failure to appear by the counsel involved here likely will not be viewed favorably.

Texas v. Johnson – The Flag Burning Case 1989

These are some of the most eloquent words ever written.  They make me happy to be an American, and a lawyer.  This is Justice Kennedy’s entire concurring opinion.

JUSTICE KENNEDY, concurring.

I write not to qualify the words JUSTICE BRENNAN chooses so well, for he says with power all that is necessary to explain our ruling. I join his opinion without reservation, but with a keen sense that this case, like others before us from time to time, exacts its personal toll. This prompts me to add to our pages these few remarks.

The case before us illustrates better than most that the judicial power is often difficult in its exercise.  We cannot here ask another Branch to share responsibility, as when the argument is made that a statute is flawed or incomplete.  For we are presented with a clear and simple statute to be judged against a pure command of the Constitution.  The outcome can be laid at no door but ours.

The hard fact is that sometimes we must make decisions we do not like.  We make them because they are right, right in the sense that the law and the Constitution, as we see them, compel the result.  And so great is our commitment to the process that, except in the rare case, we do not pause to express distaste for the result, perhaps for fear of undermining a valued principle that dictates the decision.  This is one of those rare cases.

Our colleagues in dissent advance powerful arguments why respondent may be convicted for his expression, reminding us that among those who will be dismayed by our holding will be some who have had the singular honor of carrying the flag in battle.  And I agree that the flag holds a lonely place of honor in an age when absolutes are distrusted and simple truths are burdened by unneeded apologetics.

With all respect to those views, I do not believe the Constitution gives us the right to rule as the dissenting Members of the Court urge, however painful this judgment is to announce.  Though symbols often are what we ourselves make of them, the flag is constant in expressing beliefs Americans share, beliefs in law and peace and that freedom which sustains the human spirit.  The case here today forces recognition of the costs to which those beliefs commit us.  It is poignant but fundamental that the flag protects those who hold it in contempt.

For all the record shows, this respondent was not a philosopher and perhaps did not even possess the ability to comprehend how repellent his statements must be to the Republic itself.  But whether or not he could appreciate the enormity of the offense he gave, the fact remains that his acts were speech, in both the technical and the fundamental meaning of the Constitution.  So I agree with the Court that he must go free.

What’s the Difference Between a Motion to Dismiss – FRCP 12(b) – and a Motion for Judgment on the Pleadings – FRCP 12(c)?

Trolling Judge Albert’s tentatives brings a treasure trove of good stuff.  On his calendar October 29, 2015.

“This is the defendants’ motion for judgment on the pleadings under FRCP 12 (c).  It however reads far more like a Rule 12(b) motion to dismiss for failure to state a claim.  Defendants point out the higher Rule 9 standards and cite to Twombly and Iqbal regarding the facial plausibility requirement.  There is the further complication in that the Plaintiffs claim never to have seen the answer filed August 26, 2015.  There was an extended hiatus by stipulation and order so as to allow other matters to be determined in the interim.  Coming immediately on the heels of an answer, therefore, this entire motion reads far more like a Rule 12(b) motion.  Moreover, the Plaintiffs ask for leave to amend to cure the alleged pleading deficiencies. Read more…

November 12, 2015 – 2015 Bernard Witkin Lecture: A Conversation with Associate Justice of the California Supreme Court Leondra Kruger moderated by Presiding Justice Lee Edmon

2015 Bernard Witkin Lecture: A Conversation with Associate Justice of the California Supreme Court Leondra Kruger moderated by Presiding Justice Lee Edmon

11/12/2015

Presented by: Los Angeles County Bar Association Read more…